Elizabeth Huyhn1, Elodie E. Huguet2,, and Clifford R. Berry3 1 VCA West Coast Specialty and Emergency Animal Hospital, Fountain Valley, CA, USA 2 Department of Small Animal Clinical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, University of Florida, Gainesville, FL, USA 3 Department of Molecular Biomedical Sciences, College of Veterinary Medicine, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC, USA Ultrasound is a valuable and noninvasive modality used for the identification and diagnosis of small animal diseases. With advanced training and a good understanding of cross‐sectional anatomy, ultrasound can also be used to thoroughly evaluate anatomic structures and abnormalities based on their acoustic impedance. In an emergency room setting, ultrasound is routinely used for the Thoracic or Abdominal Focused Assessment with Sonography in Triage (TFAST or AFAST), for the identification and tracking of abnormal fluid collections. The portability of today’s ultrasound equipment allows for cage‐side evaluation of veterinary patients. However, this is not the ideal environment for complete abdominal ultrasound evaluations to be done. Using a darkened, quiet room where dogs and cats can be laid on their backs or in lateral recumbency for the scan is important. Ultrasound can be used to assess all abdominal organs and the heart. The use of echocardiography to assess the cardiovascular structures will be discussed in the cardiovascular chapter. Ultrasound can provide information related to size, shape, position, margin or contour, echogenicity, and echotexture of the organ being evaluated. Other uses of ultrasound include Doppler ultrasound, elastography, and use of ultrasound‐specific contrast agents. Ultrasound consists of high‐frequency sound waves (MHz or 1 000 000 Hz), with the normal human hearing range being between 2000 and 20 000 Hz. Ultrasound waves are thus not audible to the human ear. The ultrasound waves are generated by nonionizing, mechanical compression and relaxation of a special piezoelectric crystal inside the transducer that creates a mechanical wave which then travels through the tissues. The sound wave can be generated and recorded at a specific frame rate, depending on the features that are engaged (abdomen typically has a frame rate of 40–80 frames per second compared with echocardiography which will have frame rates of greater than 100 frames per second), allowing the evaluation of static and dynamic structures. The ultrasound wave will travel through and interact with tissues in a number of different ways. Echoes (reflected ultrasound waves) are created based on the specific intrinsic property of tissue through which the sound wave is passing. This property is called acoustic impedance (Z = physical density of the tissue × the speed of sound in the tissue; defined in units of Rayl [gm/m2 s]). These mechanical sound waves return to the ultrasound probe, where they are detected and converted from mechanical into electrical energy and then changed into an anatomic image. This pulse–echo technique results in the transducer “listening” for returning pulses 99% of the time and generating outgoing (sending) pulses 1% of the time. The ultrasound beam is created by a series of piezoelectric crystals arranged in a curved, linear, or annular format. The first two arrangements are found in transducers used for the abdomen and small body parts. The last is used specifically for echocardiography where crystals do not act in unison but can act independently. This results in the ability to do spectral continuous wave Doppler ultrasound where independent crystals send US waves 100% of the time and different crystals receive and process incoming echoes 100% of the time (see Doppler section of this chapter for more details). The ultrasound transducer creates pressure variations in the form of ultrasound waves which travel through the tissues, with resultant interactions being based on variations in physical properties within the tissue and between tissue boundaries. These sound waves have a characteristic speed, frequency, and wavelength with a relationship represented by the following equation: Wavelength λ (m) = speed of sound in tissues [c (m/s)]/frequency [f (MHz)]. The speed of sound propagating in soft tissues is an average speed of sound and ultrasound machines will use 1540 m/s as the average speed of sound in tissues. The propagation speeds of sound vary for different tissue types as listed in Table 4.1. The frequency corresponds to the number of cycles, or complete waveform of the US wave, per second. Ultrasound imaging transducers used in veterinary medicine have a frequency ranging between 1 and 20 MHz (1 megahertz [MHz] defined as 1 × 106 cycles per second or Hz). TABLE 4.1 The propagation speeds of sound waves in different tissues. Multiple acoustic variables affect the way sound waves travel in tissues, including pressure, physical density of the tissue, and relative speed within the tissue as well as elastic motion of the tissues themselves. As previously stated, reflection of ultrasound waves within and between tissues is based on differences in acoustic impedance. The acoustic impedance increases if the physical density of the tissue and/or the propagation speed of the US sound wave increases. This increase in different acoustic impedances will then result in more ultrasound waves being reflected toward the transducer. When the ultrasound waves travel in tissues, there are five potential interactions: reflection, refraction, scattered, absorption or no interaction and therefore the wave is transmitted further into the tissues.
CHAPTER 4
Ultrasonography
Overview: Uses and Advantages
Basic Physics and Principles of Ultrasound in Diagnostic Imaging
Interaction of Sound Waves in the Tissues
Tissue
Propagation speed of sound (m/s)
Gas
331
Fat
1450
Liver
1549
Kidney
1561
Brain
1541
Blood
1570
Bone
4080